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The latest Time poll finds the Occupy Wall Street movement has a 54% favorable rating. In contrast, the Tea Party's favorable rating is just 27%.
barfo
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The latest Time poll finds the Occupy Wall Street movement has a 54% favorable rating. In contrast, the Tea Party's favorable rating is just 27%.
If nothing else this movement (and the Tea Party) has gotten people more interested in politics.
If nothing else this movement (and the Tea Party) has gotten people more interested in politics.
This movement should be called the Flea Party.
You got that from Ann Coulter.
This movement should be called the Flea Party.
The "what people want" is all-but-impossible to achieve. We might as well ask people which superheroes people want to exist.
Ed O.
The "what people want" is all-but-impossible to achieve. We might as well ask people which superheroes people want to exist.
Ed O.
I think it's indicative of definitions, though.
I make a pretty good salary, have been putting away toward retirement, have an "emergency" cash fund, and yet my net worth is negative because my house is upside down by almost 100k. So even though I'm ok check-to-check, I'm in the "no wealth" category, right?
I think it's a relatively misleading graph, but I can understand what happens when the populace at large answers questions they know nothing about.
Someone in their 20's and 30's with a car payment, the average US savings, and who rents a home probably has a negative net worth...without even going into credit cards and student debt. But I'm pretty sure that if you asked someone fitting those attributes about where they fall in the "wealth" category, I don't think they'd say they fall into the worst 20% and have negative wealth.
Of course, we're all assuming the graphs are correct.
After 30 years, his mortgage will be paid off. The chart doesn't reflect that.
Nor does it reflect the vast amount of wealth lost by the bottom 80% from the stock market and housing bubbles.
Nor does it reflect the value of social security as an annuity.
Nor does it account for the govt.'s wealth, considering all the raw land it owns as well as office buildings, airports, etc.
Ok, I guess you could argue that we are all wealthier because we own a share of the government holdings. Does that change the relative wealth distribution shown? I guess if the government's wealth is much larger than the total private wealth, then the differences among citizens would be washed out by the government contribution to each person's wealth.
Why should it?
Actually, I think it does show the results of that, unless it is an old graph.
That's a good point.
Ok, I guess you could argue that we are all wealthier because we own a share of the government holdings. Does that change the relative wealth distribution shown? I guess if the government's wealth is much larger than the total private wealth, then the differences among citizens would be washed out by the government contribution to each person's wealth.
barfo
Because it's a form of wealth not captured by your chart. Pride of ownership, at least. Payments that are going toward equity, even if that equity is reduced. It's a lot like the value of SS as an annuity in that respect.
You and I go to vegas with $500 each. You lose $400 of yours, and I win $5. How is the distribution before and after? It doesn't reflect that we both had $500 (the chart).
Add govt. to your charts and they are 99.99% of it, and we the people would be a tiny sliver of color.
No, sorry, pride of ownership is not a recognized form of weath. If you are going to admit that, then regular sex might be a form of wealth.
What you don't own now, but might in the future, is not counted toward your present wealth. You might also go bankrupt in the future, or win the lottery.
Why is what came before relevant? The chart isn't about what was true 10 years ago, or 100 years ago, or 1 million years ago. It's a current snapshot. Whether I used to be a pauper or I used to be a Rockefeller, what I have today is my wealth.
Link? I'm not sure that's true. If it were true, we could sell a tiny, tiny fraction of our common assets and pay off the national debt completely. How tiny? Well, the people own around $50 trillion. So if that's 0.01%, then the government owns 10,000 times as much, or 500,000 trillion dollars. Our national debt is 14 trillion.
I'm not sure you can run around saying 'the government is broke, the debt is crushing' and then claim 99.99% of the wealth is owned by the government.
barfo
You did put a down payment on the home, and just like your FICA withholding "guarantees" you some return (monthly retirement benefits), your mortgage payments pays down the principle. It's not like the home is going to be worthless in the end.
Your "wealth" graphics measure unrealized gains.
The "rich" bet $5 and won $5,000,000,000, everyone else lost $400.
The government isn't selling national parks, mount rushmore, or the white house, but they're surely worth quite a bit of money. The government deliberately doesn't put a dollar value on such "stewardship and heritage assets." They don't capitalize the collections of rare items in the museums, etc., either.
While there are certainly greedy people causing plenty of problems, I don't think they're the sole persons responsible. Moochers and lay-abouts contribute some as well. Or are you just saying that the ultimate demise is caused by the rich and that the non-contributors to society play only a small part of the problem?
I think it's indicative of definitions, though.
I make a pretty good salary, have been putting away toward retirement, have an "emergency" cash fund, and yet my net worth is negative because my house is upside down by almost 100k. So even though I'm ok check-to-check, I'm in the "no wealth" category, right?
I think it's a relatively misleading graph, but I can understand what happens when the populace at large answers questions they know nothing about.
After 30 years, his mortgage will be paid off. The chart doesn't reflect that. Nor does it reflect the vast amount of wealth lost by the bottom 80% from the stock market and housing bubbles. Nor does it reflect the value of social security as an annuity. Nor does it account for the govt.'s wealth, considering all the raw land it owns as well as office buildings, airports, etc.
You confuse the relationship between wealth and effort. There seldom is one.
Most rich people are born rich and no effort is required of them to remain so.
Most poor people exert more effort each and every day than any rich person you will ever meet.
Many rich people are not greedy, but quite obviously the richest of the rich are greedy as can be.
The only moochers and layabouts I have personally met were born rich.
According to the graph, most people don't have a clue how really badly they are being reamed by the uberwealthy. I'd say that's obvious.
So the 40+% who make a decision to not graduate high school, hang out rather than work, get pregnant, live off welfare and/or the government, take drugs, turn to crime... are all just pawns of the uberwealthy. I maintain the majority of those people are lazy pieces of human debris who get counted as those so abused...
